Show
10 citations
related to United States. Patent Office
Show
10 citations
related to United States. Patent Office as a subject or category
Article
Kara W. Swanson
(2017)
Rubbing Elbows and Blowing Smoke: Gender, Class, and Science in the Nineteenth-Century Patent Office.
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
(pp. 40-61).
(/isis/citation/CBB667185119/)
Book
Mark S Monmonier
(2017)
Patents and Cartographic Inventions: A New Perspective for Map History.
(/isis/citation/CBB426795081/)
Article
Siegmund Schulz
(2014)
Eine modifizierte Van-der-Grinten-Projektion – Zum 110-jährigen Jubiläum des US-Patentes der Originalversion [A modified Van der Grinten Projection – On the Occasion of the 110-Years-Anniversary of the US Patent Issuance].
Kartographische Nachrichten
(pp. 211-218).
(/isis/citation/CBB266832044/)
Chapter
Kahn, Jonathan
(2011)
Inventing Race as a Genetic Commodity in Biotechnology Patents.
In: Making and Unmaking Intellectual Property: Creative Production in Legal and Cultural Perspective
(p. 305).
(/isis/citation/CBB001221562/)
Chapter
Pottage, Alain; Sherman, Brad
(2011)
Kinds, Clones, and Manufactures.
In: Making and Unmaking Intellectual Property: Creative Production in Legal and Cultural Perspective
(p. 269).
(/isis/citation/CBB001221560/)
Article
John, Richard R.
(Spring 2010)
The Selling of Samuel Morse.
American Heritage of Invention and Technology
(pp. 38-37).
(/isis/citation/CBB403315736/)
Chapter
Hilgartner, Stephen
(2004)
Mapping Systems and Moral Order: Constituting Property in Genome Laboratories.
In: States of Knowledge: The Co-Production of Science and Social Order
(p. 131).
(/isis/citation/CBB000470173/)
Book
Dobyns, Kenneth W.
(1994)
The Patent Office pony: A history of the early Patent Office.
(/isis/citation/CBB000036044/)
Article
Robert C. Post
(1978)
From Pillar to Post: The Plight of the Patent Models.
IA. The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology
(pp. 58-60).
(/isis/citation/CBB458639249/)
Article
Post, Robert C.
(1976)
“Liberalizers” versus “scientific men” in the antebellum Patent Office.
Technology and Culture
(pp. 24-54).
(/isis/citation/CBB000013085/)
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